In this age of digital overload, your email inbox can quickly become a chaotic mix of work updates, shopping receipts, newsletters, and spam. One simple way to get organized and help protect your privacy is to create a secondary email address. But before you do, it’s important to understand the difference between a second inbox and an email alias.
An email alias is a forwarding address that routes messages to your main inbox. For instance, if your email address uses your full name (jonathan.doe@example.com), you might have aliases set up that use just your first name (jonathan@example.com) or nickname (jon@example.com). Emails sent to an alias still get delivered to the inbox for the main address. This can be useful for filtering or masking your real email, but it requires that all your email be maintained under a single login account with one storage limit.
Alternatively, you can set up a second email address as a completely separate account with its own inbox, password, and identity; this email address can be a “dummy” account that doesn’t use your name at all. You can then log into it independently and manage it separately from your primary email. Services like Gmail or Outlook allow you to create free email addresses and associate them with your main account so you can quickly switch between inboxes while still keeping them separate. In this way, you can use your secondary email for non-essential online accounts and signups while reserving your main email for more secure or personal accounts.
Personally, I’ve used a secondary email account for decades, and it has drastically reduced the amount of spam and clutter I receive in my main inbox, so I highly recommend it. Here’s a quick summary of why having a second email inbox is a smart move:
Protect Your Privacy. Using a secondary email for online shopping, newsletters, or free trials keeps your primary inbox clean and reduces the risk of spam. If the secondary account becomes compromised, your main email—and the sensitive info tied to it—stays safe.
Stay Organized. Think of your secondary email as a digital junk drawer. It’s perfect for signing up for promotions, logging into recreational or entertainment accounts, or accessing public Wi-Fi. Your primary email can then remain clear for important messages like work, banking, and personal correspondence.
As a tip, don’t just create a second inbox and forget about it. Check it regularly, set up filters, and use it strategically. And if you only need to mask your email for a short-term signup, an alias might be enough—but for long-term control, a full secondary inbox is the way to go.